Parshas Yisro: Getting Out of Your Own Way
This week’s parsha isn’t named after the Ten Commandments. It’s named after what happens right before them. Before revelation. Before the laws. Before Sinai. Something interrupts the flow. Moshe is drowning. Not in the sea like the Egyptians last week, but in responsibility. From morning until night, people line up in front of him. Every question, every dispute, every decision goes through him. Not because he wants control, and not because he doesn’t trust anyone else, but because when you’re in survival mode, you don’t step back and plan. You keep things moving. You deal with whatever is right in front of you. You carry what needs to be carried. Survival shrinks your field of vision. That doesn’t make you wrong. It just makes you busy. And Yisro is the one who sees it. “This isn’t good,” he tells Moshe. “You can’t do this alone. You’re too deep in it to see what’s happening.” It matters who Yisro is. He’s an outsider, not caught up in the urge...